Lhakpa Sherpa (Nepali: Lakhpa Sherpa; born 1973)[1] is a NepaliSherpamountain climber. She has climbed Mount Everest ten times, the most of any woman in the world.[2][3] Her record-breaking tenth climb was on May 12, 2022, which she financed via a crowd-funding campaign.[4] In 2000, she became the first Nepali woman to climb and descend Everest successfully. In 2016, she was listed as one of BBC's 100 Women.[5]
Early life
Lhakpa Sherpa was born in a cave in the region, and had no formal education.[2] She grew up in Balakharka, a village in the Makalu, Nepal region of the Himalayas.[6][7] She is one of 11 children, and is a single mother of two daughters and a son herself.[8][2] Since in Nepal, only boys were allowed to go to school, she carried her brother two hours to school and back.
Career
In 2000 she was the leader of an expedition sponsored by Asian Trekking.[6] On May 18, 2000 she became the first Nepali woman to summit Mount Everest and survive (see also Pasang Lhamu Sherpa).[6][7] This climb was with the Nepali Women Millennium Expedition.[9]
In 2003, the U.S. PBS noted that she had summited Mount Everest three times, the most for a woman.[10] In May 2003 she reached the summit with her sister and brother; Ming Kipa and Mingma Gelu.[11]
By 2007 Lhakpa Sherpa had summited Everest six times since 1999 and her husband summited nine.[12] That year they hosted a presentation about their 2007 Everest trip, with donations taken for Quaker Lane Cooperative Nursery School.[12] Gheorghe and Lhakpa summited Mount Everest five times together.[13]
In 2016 she summited Mount Everest from Tibet (China), making her seventh summit.[14] The president of Mount Everest Summiteers' Association, a Nepali woman and high-altitude worker Maya Sherpa also summited, but from Nepal.[14] Maya Sherpa is another record-setting Nepali woman, and she has also summited K2.[14]
In 2016, she was listed among the BBC's 100 most inspirational and influential women. On 24 April 2023 Lhakpa won India's prestigious Tenzing Norgay National Adventure award. She has also received sponsorship to climb K2.
Personal life
Lhakpa is named for the day of the week she was born on (Wednesday).[13] Although born in Nepal, she is now a U.S. resident and works at various jobs and takes care of her three children.[13] She has worked at the U.S. store 7 Eleven.[22][13] She worked at Whole Foods Market.[23][24]
She has two daughters and one son,[22] and was married to Gheorghe Dijmărescu, a Romanian-American, for 12 years.[22] They met in 2000 in Kathmandu, Nepal and got married in 2002.[15][13] After marriage, she left her permanent residence in Nepal and moved to US where Gheorghe worked in construction. Gheorghe was abusive throughout their marriage, pulling and screaming at his 5 year old daughter. In 2008 Gheorghe got cancer.[25] In 2012 when Dijmărescu became violent, and beat Lhakpa Sherpa to the point she was taken to the emergency room; a hospital social worker placed her and her two girls in a local shelter where they stayed for eight months.[24]
In 2016, she began again receiving recognition in various news arenas as the woman with the most Everest summitings, and completed her seventh summit that year.[13][19]
Family and relationships
Her little sister Ming reached the summit of Mount Everest on May 22, 2003 when she was 15 years old (she climbed with Lhakpa and Gelu),[11] thus becoming the youngest person known to have summited Mount Everest (see also Temba Tsheri and Jordan Romero).[26][27] Her brother is Mingma Gelu Sherpa and is noted to have reached the summit of Mount Everest eight times by 2016.[22][13] The BBC noted that when three of them reached the summit together in 2003, that was the first group of three siblings on the summit at the same time, as recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records.[9]
On the 2004 Connecticut Everest Expedition her then-husband Dijmărescu struck Lhakpa.[28] According to Michael Kodas, a journalist present during the expedition, Dijmărescu, "hook[ed] a blow with his right hand to the side of his wife's head."[28][29] This altercation "sparked a sort of media sensation in the mountaineering world".[9]